KITH AND KIN
Elle Decor
|May 2022
Moving full-time into an 18th-century house in Dutchess County, New York, deepened one ex-Brooklynite's sense of community.
The rear facade of the Georgian-style residence, built in 1770 by Benjamin Noxon. For details, see Resources.

Through a door framed by Boston ivy, a view of design researcher Alyse Archer-Coité's backyard in Poughquag, New York.

Alyse Archer-Coité, in Totême, and her mother, Gloria, with ArcherCoité's long-haired calico, Pip, in the sitting room. Antique Azande burial sculpture (left).
Analyse Archer-Coité knows design. That much is evident in her work: as an editor at several independent print and digital art and interiors titles; as former programming director at the defunct Brooklyn architecture and urbanism incubator A/D/O; and, now, at Apple, where she leads research for the tech titan's industrial design team.
What she did not know, until recently, was just what moving herself full-time from Brooklyn to the hamlet of Poughquag, New York, two hours north of the city, would mean, beyond the evident allure of space and fresh air. “The day after I got the keys, we got a foot of snow," says Archer-Coité, recounting her earliest days in her stately 1770 Georgian retreat, all hipped roofline and elegant red brick. “When the snow stopped, I realized I didn't have a shovel. It was a very quick initiation to life in the country,” she adds, laughing now, but with an air that indicates the story is only funny in retrospect.
This story is from the May 2022 edition of Elle Decor.
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